During a pandemic, regulations should not get between sick people and health care, or between hungry people and food. This also applies in normal times.

When the coronavirus first began to spread, doctors suddenly found they were unable to practice telemedicine or practice across state lines. Restaurants often weren’t allowed to shift from dine-in to takeout and delivery.

Fortunately, federal, state, and local policy makers acted almost immediately to get rid of many such rules. But if these rules were not needed during a crisis, they were probably never really needed in the first place. How many more never-needed rules are there still on the books, hurting the COVID-19 response? How might these rules harm future crisis responses?

Congress and the President’s pandemic response so far has mostly consisted of hasty “flash policy” such as stimulus and bailouts. However, the COVID-19 pandemic is different from a normal economic shock. It requires a different response. Standard stimulus policies attempt to stimulate more economic transactions between people. This is precisely how diseases spread. From a public health perspective, stimulus is unwise.

Even after contagion dies down, there remains the fact that stimulus is driven by politics more than economics. Much of the post-2008 financial crisis stimulus was ill-targeted or wasted.

The federal government by nature is a large and inflexible institution. People expect things of Washington that it simply cannot do. Bipartisan political dysfunction is making an already difficult task impossible.

As Congress gears up for a Phase 4 stimulus, it is crucial that regulatory reform be part of the package. The top two priorities now are keeping people safe and minimizing economic damage, in that order. Regulatorysludge, as legal scholar Cass Sunstein calls it, is harming both objectives.

That is why the Competitive Enterprise Institute has started a #NeverNeeded campaign. By collecting ideas on the#NeverNeededTwitter hashtag, theneverneeded.cei.orgwebsite, and a newpaper, policy makers already have a ready menu of reform options to act on, with a continuing pipeline of fresh ideas and public input.

Certain principles should be incorporated into policy responses to the crisis going forward;

Suspend or repeal policies that make the crisis worse than it would otherwise be;

Remove regulatory barriers that prevent an effective response to the crisis;

​There is plenty to do at the federal, state, and local levels. State-level regulations targeting gig workers, such as California’s AB5 law, are preventing delivery services from helping people get needed supplies while quarantined, while preventing people from finding home-based work at a time of potentially record unemployment.

Permits and other red tape are preventing distilleries from converting to hand sanitizer factories as quickly as they could. Mask factories that could start in days instead face permit waits of 45 to 90 days. At a time when blood donations are urgently needed, regulations forbid gay men from donating blood. That last rule, fortunately, is being eased.

Financial regulations make it harder for struggling businesses to organize crowdfunding campaigns to stay afloat. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are still wasting millions of dollars and untold staff resources waging a campaign against flavored vapes. The Davis-Bacon Act means fewer infrastructure jobs from stimulus projects.

The regulatory system itself needs an overhaul. An independent commission should comb through the 185,000-pageCode of Federal Regulationsand send to Congress an omnibus package of #NeverNeeded rules to repeal. Congress should require new regulations to have automatic sunsets unless renewed, make one-in, two-out rulemaking permanent, and give agencies a regulatory budget within which they must keep their compliance costs. These will help to keep regulations flexible in the long-term for future crisis responses. States should do the same.

In just the last few weeks, we have seen case after case of old regulations hurting people. Many were never needed. Whatever justification others may once had have been superseded by the need for fast COVID-19 response. Examples include health care, medical equipment, food, trade barriers, and technology. The time to clean the #NeverNeeded mess is now.

Ryan Young is a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, where Iain Murray is vice president for strategy.